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NEIGHBORS MAKE DARING RESCUES IN TENEMENT FIRE i ‘ aarp’ Flames Spread Rapidly and Women and Children Are Caught in Burning Buildings, PROMPT POLICE AID.| | Swooning Woman Blocks Fire | Escape, but Fireman Arrives in Time to Save Her. | Elevén tamitios were driven trom thelr | homes by fire In Bay Ridge early this| moraing. Four of them had to be res cued and six lost all thetr posseestona, ‘Tho piaze s: the hallway on the Atet floor of No. 333 Furty-fourth street | ata''spread to No, £M, both of which ware three-story, dowdle tenement frame bubidiogs. Josep Justin, who lives with his wite ©@ the first floor of No. ) Was aroused }y¥ the wnell of smoke, and on opening his door for Investigation was driven, back for 2 moment by, the dense fumes. Mb cated to his wife, and they just had tinte to awaken the Murphys in the partment across the hai! and escape in thelr nightclothes, William Murphy dropped his wife, Marcatet, through the window and then passed out to her their four children. | As Murphy followed then the flames| brgke into his rooms, &@ passerby sending in an alarm, Murphy and Justin got on to| the fear fire escape froin an adjoining | hoes and after fixing the ladder | cued Frank Bowman and his wife and two bables and Charles Morrisey and his wife Kate and year-old child from the second floor. FAINTED AND BLOCKEO THE FIRE ESCAPE. As Mrs, Morrisey was being helped down she fainted on the ladder and Blocked the escape for several minutes, while Willam Kent, with his wite and two ohildren, and John and Mary Kelly, &@ newly wedded couple, were sas for help from the third floor and the ames wore rapidly reaching them, i} } { HE EVENING MESS, TUESDAY, MAROEH 34 THE LENTEN LOOKING GLASS 3% [ Something the Club-Woman-About-Town Ought to See for Her Own Good—Sixth of a Series of Articles by Nixola Greeley-Smith. Copyright, 1912, by The Press Publiching Co. (The New York World). ANOTHER. ANGLE ON THE §=CLUB «PROPOSITION. She Might Get a Hint to Quit Setting the Alarm Clock for 6.30 A. M. in Order to Prepare for an Early Meeting of the Gadabouts, Thereby Rob- ing Her Husband of His Beauty Sleep. Patroimen Glennon and Siemtried of | Her Mirror Would Fresent a More Flattering Like- ness if She Lived in Deeds, Not Words—Less Talk and More Attainment of Good Aims Desirable. the Fourth avenue station, climbed the eecape at No. 336 and succeeded in ree- culng Mrs. Kelly and Mrs. Kent and the children by getting them through the windows. Kent and Kelly managed to ein down the escape while Mrs, Morriney ‘was being removed. Just as Fire Chief Lally arrived on) thé second alarm the fire spread to No. 384, and so quickly enveloped the butld- ing that the five families in !t, with thelr twelve children, were only able to esxeape tn thelr nightclothes, though they hed been watching the rescues next door, All the homeless were taken In by neighbors. No, 3% was burned com- pletely out, but much tn No. 233 was saved, The damage was estimated at 0,00, —_—_—_——— a ton Passengers by Brooklyn Bridge Collist A, hundred passen: were badly *! up and one or two slightly in- 4 fh the early rush hour to-day at the yn end of Brooklyn Bridge | ¥ @ Gates avenue car crashed into fear of a Court street car that was | passengers at the Sands sine tation. Lula McCabe, thirty-eight, of No, 6 Borty-third street, Brooklyn, be-| came bysterlcal: Nicholas Ucropina, thirty-eight, of No. 223 Dograw atreet, Lrgeklyn, got « nasty scalp wound, A/| cal¥.tq the Hudson Street Hospital | broysht an ambulance to meet the car at fhe Manhattan end of the britge, Dut both Ucropina and Mrs. McCabe Say able to go on to work, delayed seven minutes, | ‘The rails slippery with snow and the Gates avenue car motorman did not | ae the car in front until too late to @iop. “Nelther car was much damaged, / “IMPROVES W! Nest number of “PU BR Weekly Joke Bo Jit, the ie Supday World, is the beat yet nis paragraph is written | egtance over an advance vopy | wp from the Color Presa * The Diary OFA Conjurer-Poet stands for Triumph, With ww many meet When searching for articles even to curtall the schedule @ little merits\ and uses. town. | the man that pays the club dues. The “man@bout-town” may be merely a figure of epeech, but the clubwoman-about-town is to be met at any bour from 9 to 6 in every hotel in New York which has an assembly room large enough to hold her gala clothes and her latest views. Now the clubwoman-about-town has undoubted Perbaps the most serious criticism which can be made of her {s that she is too muchabout- Even a husband is entitled to his beauty sleop, and if a clubwoman spouse with a first meeting scheduled for 9 A. M. sets the alarm clock for half-past six she is | Two HURT IN CAR rina ‘oncier SMITH not showing quite the right degree of consideration tor | There is no incident of married life in which unanimity is more easen- tial to domestic peace than this little matter of setting the alarm clock, the merciless clarion of the depressing dawn, insistent as the voice of ambition or @ book agent, intermittent and Inevitable as malaria, tocsin of gay dreams and downy eage, ruthless summoner to toil, If the Angel Gabriel sets the celestin! alarm clock for ono of those ungodly hours of the carly morning there will be a whole lot of us who will nover rise on Judg- ment Day. And Honven will surely Boast @ superfinity of women, un: less a white-aproned angel makes aeversi trips through the rocking graveyards to rouso still sleeping husbands with a “Zest Call for enti" ert seems to me that one of the inalienable rights of husbands is that | of setting (he alarm clock. The womat | |who rouses the ured business man} \from his slumbers in order that she may be in time for the first meeting on |the day's club scheduleyis guilty of an) unvromanly usurpation of @ strictly | masculine function, !'WHY DID YOU SET THAT D——D THING OFF SO EARLY? If she doesn’t believe me, let her look In the Lenten Looking Glass at the anguished picture of her newly risen Jet her hear his outraged tn- patronizing explanation that she is ing breakfast an hour eariter so she will not be too late for a morning lecture on ‘Woman's Relation to the Home." Perhaps she may be t noted let her look it over carefully: | town innumerable bees buzzing about her head. But they are words—words— Wwords—the multiple millions of words spoken in wome: Here and there, of course, t rtain wood actions and achieved reforms which | these words have brought avout, Bui for the most part they will be jusi/ words that fell upon stony ground o: among tares, WOMEN’S CLUB THE DEADLY FOE OF THE THEATRE. ‘There 1s one peraon in 3 thatsnould regard the clu s his deadly foe, He is the the- atrical manager, Yet in all the vi ing explanations of empty theatr from the rivalry of moving pictures to the increasing popularity of @uburban Ufe, 1 have never seen a reference to the effect of women’s clubs on theatrica, |fortunes, Yet the influence is direct anu unmistakable, In the first place, men go to the thea- | tre for the most part to please women, Now, a woman who has been out all day husband quiry, “What did you set that ——— ting | is not nearly so apt to want diversion Joft 90 early fort” and her coot and | and recreation in the evening. More- over, she has been entertained in the lafternoon for nothing by singers whorr she would have to pay to hear at night Authors have read thelr works to her, city oficiais have left thelr desks to lecture to her on the workings of thetr jany rate, i departments; and all this as part of | Lost on the sireet. 9 A. M, Aries Club—The Lab i all poolside club meeting for the price Tre public hes, learned wee ‘qurus Club—How to Down | of her regular club du That World “Lost” ads. find Many a thing that Mas been left behind. Werld “Lost & Found” Ads. Are BEST for Twe Good Reasons: ~ 4ST: They get a circulation in New York City greater than the Herald, Times, Sun and Tribune || ADDED TOGETHER; and aD: As The World prints many thousands more advertisements every week than any other news- on earth, people naturally urn to World advertisements For Variety and for Results. Yo telephone your “Lost & Found ad. to The World Call 4000 Peekrnas. 2 3 | Gemin! CircleSoclety and | the Modern Wife. 2M, Exquisite, 1 P, M.—Luncheon. 8 P.M, Capricorn Club—Is Turkey: Trotting Immoral. 4° P. M, Gadabout Guild-Love as a) Fine Art. 6 P. M.—Tea, @ix o’clooxk may find her back in own home, but it is not un- cet for the tired business man to there before her aad, ia answer Mh the man’s invariable question on arriving at home or in be is dinner ready?’ to learn the maid that his wife will uot be home till 7 o'clock, There !s a chance that the club-woman- @bout-town may got recognize certain swarming and multiple creatures that obsoure her own reflection in the Lenten Looking Glass. They will seem to her CHANCE TO SHOW OFF HER FINE NEW GOWNS, The club also furnishes her with an | irgo Asgoctation~The House | opportunity to show off her fine gowns | nd to see the fine raiment of other women under Save cu SILVER! and chemicals wii it, To guard against these @ Ways {igure @ Dewutiful iustre use ELECTRO SiverPalsh ON SILic peaeconomical, Ic end OF ri more intimate circum- - \ | j | | | | “| ! ABRIEL SETTING THE LAST ALARM stances than the theatre offers. notorious that the presidents of we en's clubs are chosen for their a to dress the part. “What do you think of Mrs. “Do you Ike her?" Yet a candidate for clu! err on the other eide, she wears perfectly exquisite things, but have you heard?”— ‘Within a very few years s New York woman was defeated for the presidency of the D. A. R. by scan. Galous tattle which co: her eventually to publish her marriage certificate a: @ birth certificate of her son, Glass still pushes forward for wants to do after she gets it, talked with newly elected presid the policies they were goin in office, Yet anybody with an tmazination lives So much faster than life t all know now just what from the throne would be Ukely event of our succeedi; George as Emperor of India in 1920, The Lenten Looking Glass would pr jsent a more flattering likeness of | lubwoman-about-town if she ved In |deeds, not words. The mirror of medi- jtation does not reveal in her unworthy aims, but only a vast willingness to talk about rather than to attain them, Manutecurers, aa a retail buying public at unheard of sortment, Plumes to Satisfy Every Largest assortment of the latest. FRENCH PLUMES. “regular $1 00 valu ) regular 10,00 vaiue, it quality) hat % (One Door Bolow 23d Street) It ts Jones asks one club woman of “Dear me, no!” replies. the king: maker, “She doesn't ‘gown’ well enough.” honors may » I know But {€ the club woman seeing all} these things in the Lenten Looking | the crown let her know at least what she T have} ents of clubs who had absolutely no idea of | 6 to pursue | Ostrich Plumes "FROM BEARER TO WEARER” salesrooms, to distribute our tremer Pay Us a Visit and Convince Yourself. New York Ostrich Feather Company (Inc.) 184 Fifth Avenue, at 23d St., N. Y. 'DEAS ARG UNPOPULAR witt THE HUSBAND i | ONLY THREE CROOKS | judge Rosalsky Gives Treas- ; urer Who Stole $140,000 Limit Sentence. Only three sentences were imposed on \erooics in the Court of General Sessions lyemterday. Many prisoners wore tried and convicted or pleaded gutity to the Indictments against them und were re- nanded for sentence. Those sentenced were: BY JUDGE SWANN. Jéin Hines, alias William J. Bender, thirty-seven years old, Indicted for rob- bery in the second desree; pleaded gutity of grand larceny In the first de grec. Two prior convictions, On Feb. 2% he held up a man at No. 2% Bowery fand stole $39.50. and six months, BY JUDGE MULQUEEN, Giuseppe Morando, twenty-six years ected of grand larceny, s ond degree. Is a pickpocket; stole $3 from a citizen on Park Row, April 9 last, and has been out on ball. No prior jeonvict Penitentiary one year. BY JUDGE ROSALSKY. Porcy G. Vanderoef, thirty-seven years old. Plended guilty ‘of grand larce! lfirst degree. Stole $140.00 from his e \ ployers, Van Kouren and Thornton, Com- . No. 17 Thomas street. Thefts pat ed firm into bankruptey. No prior conviction. State prison not less thin four s and one month, or more than nine years and six months, Maximum enalty for crime not more than ten | years. CaN SESeP aa | Gen, Loud Hurt by Taxt. \ ‘The friends of Gen, George B, Loud, two noua! Department Commander of the Grand our speech | Army of the Republte, in the un- ‘that he was confined t ing King ‘$16 West One Hundred and Six learned to-day hin hi |street, by shock and brutses 1 tained when he was struck by a taxteab | Broadway opposite the post-office | terday, So far tell there are no bones broken and no internal injuries, ‘The driver of the cab put Mr. Loud in ‘nis home, in 4 upened our new Fifth Avenue lous wholesale stock direct to the f pric We have, in our complete Purse, Parisian Creations in Fancy Feathers. | WILLOW PLUMBS, | 16-tnoh—regutar $4.00 value, 82,00 1S-inch—regular 6.00 value, 3,00 2-Inch—regular 10.00 val 5.00 -inch—regular 15,00 value, 7.50 80-tnoh—regular 22.00 value, 11,00 Wigher Priced piiumes all at % (Take Elevators t Salesrcoms) GET PRISON TERMS : State prison, four years as his physician ean | ‘t and hurried him to it more digestible HAPPY WITH WIFE, + OTISDENESHES TO WED ACTRESS ements Lawyer Brands Story of Pro- posed Marriage to “Bobby” Roberts a Fabrication. Charles F, Otis, eon of the late Nor- ton P, Otis, President of the Otis Ele- vator Company, to-day indignantly de- nied atatements published in @ morning newspaper that he was {to macry | “Dobby” Roberts, an actross Mr. Ot!s, who fs an attorney nal offices at No. % Broad street, was found at his homo, No. 627 Weert One Hundred and Tenth street, at breakfast te and two ehtidren, Norton, | od, and Ellzabeth, alx | “T have read the account in a morn: | ing paper that Mias Roberts, an actress with Marie Dressier in ‘Tillle's Night. mare,’ left the company to come to New York to become my bride,” sald Mr. Otts. “I want to know who ts the author of such a malicious story, I golng to begin e| who started the report, 4 {se that I will make a cute for matictous sland | “E have met Mies Roberts, but how a report that she was marry me started T cannot say, Unless some en- torprising pross agent sent out the re- port in a frantle effort to get publictty for his a th Mrs, Otis and the | children and myse!f are a happy famlly and this report ts a damnably malicious | one | “lam quoted in a morning paper os saying that I am going to marry Miss rts next week and tat Mrs. Otts re divorced. rjast nig bout 2 Kk thls morning the tel- ephone rang and when I answered tt @ volce asked me If I were golng to get Th git one of my jucular I sald ‘Certainly, but please let to bed.’ I then hung up the re- leetver, 1 sald nothing about being a!+ |vorved, That is a fabrication, All 1} want to know 1* tho person who started the story. I promise trou Mr. Otls and Miss Harriet Thomas Bell | lof Yonkers were married June 8, 1904, Mrs, Ols's father was J. Murvey Beil, ‘neveral times Mayor of Yonkers, and @ wealthy real estate operator, Mr, Otis lis @ graduate of Princeton University land Columbus Law Se He was tw Attorney of Protect Yourself! Get the Original and Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK) Tho Food-drink for All Ages. FreNarin ns romnepreted deiqaeh wy i ebeodiads wat Ghd wfc | Reeaie the nursing: malted. grain, in pant form, A quick lunch prepared in a ‘minute. ' Toke no substitute. Asi: for HORLICK'S, \Kot in Any Witk Trust ‘T’S our famous - steam-cooking process in the |mill. requiring 2 hours that gives H-O that extra fine flavor—makes and wholesome | than oatmeal pre- ' pared in any other way. All ready to serve in 20 min- utes—saves 2 hours of your time 'and fuel. A pack- ‘age makes 36 roe Ol eo Poth as, 8. germ-biling Hate sevens, Reiter jouche or wash, TYREE 5 TI. we aor bas wo Tauai owe “TYREE’S Anticeptic. Powder tor Fr ier mH afertiy deli preventative hysictane prevents neues, ulcers, years. vi aay QUEEN QUALITY SHOP. in the heart of Gn ton ing Md & few doors west of Fifth Avenue. ft KNOW YOU WILL, FIND it lightfal when you are tired of the ment store confusion and hutry, to step into this pleasant shop devoted estlm’ sively to women’s footwear and be in- telligently fitted with comfortable shoes. BEHIND QUEEN QUALITY shoes: stand the largest manuf: of ered : footwear in the world, Te capacity of 17,000 pairs each day. record is possible because they offer the best in style and eal at moderate prices—$3.50 to $5.00. I SUGGEST THAT YOU drop ip the next time you are shopping in the nei borhood and look over the wonderful assortment of Spring styles, including larer: Shoes and Oxfords, in ev kind of leather and fabric—many colored uppers ; also Storm Boots, and beautiful Evening Slippers. In fact, there is everything here that a woman can want. boxziif Style Notes Madame Louise Boot Shop 32 West 34th Street The Tatpert Popular Priced Fur House ir: theCountry The Manhattan Cloak, Suit & Fur Co., Between and 6” Ave, 16%” 17% Final Fur Sale Stupendous Reductions $65 Karakul Coats, 24.98 54 inches long; high lustred, fine curl, whole skin, foreign dyed; richly lined with brocaded_ silk: former_pri: $6: $32.50 Baltic Seal Coats (Full Length) $60 Russian Pony Coats (Full Length) : $85 Russian Pony Coats (Full Length).... 24.98 $100 French Seal Coats (Full Length).... $100 Mink Marmot Coats (Full Length)... 39.98 |] $35 Black Fox Sets 12.98 $50 Pointed Fox Sets $60 Skunk Sets........ + beeen ed $20 Russian Lynx Sets..............ceeeeee $20 Blue Wolf Sets. tf hee ee ee een Furs Purchased Now Stored Free of Charge at Endof Season H Nacht Cannas (oasa E. E. TURLINGTON, Vice-President. 8 Broadway at 13th Street Women’s Department Announce for Tomorrow an Oe or oOooooG Important Special Sale of (0 Smart New Spring Dresses! Mannish Serges in navy blue and black;| real lace; braid or white serge trimmed, | Military «Afternoon Dresses, of White Pique; Russian coat clfect; hand-embroidered, with corded belt, Regular « Cossack Linen Dresses —_—_12.50 Values Patti Md LL Plain tailored and Russian coat effects, | in natural, white and blue, POTBAVG TOC Economy and Satisfaction Co Hand in Hand with YS